PEOPLE

Hélène Rey
  

 


Hélène Rey is the Lord Bagri Professor of Economics at London Business School.  Until 2007, she was at Princeton University, as Professor of Economics and International Affairs in the Economics Department and the Woodrow Wilson School. Her research focuses on the determinants and consequences of external trade and financial imbalances, the theory and empirics of financial crises and the organization of the international monetary system. She demonstrated in particular that countries's gross external asset positions help predict current account adjustments and the exchange rate. She introduced the concept of Global Financial Cycles and qualified the idea of the Mundellian Trilemma. She was awarded an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, the 2006 Bernácer Prize and the 2012 inaugural Birgit Grodal Award of the European Economic Association. In 2013 she received the Yrjö Jahnsson Award shared with Thomas Piketty, in 2014, the Inaugural Carl Menger Preis, the 2015 Prix Edouard Bonnefous, the 2017 Maurice Allais Prize and the 2020 Prix Turgot. Professor Rey is an elected Fellow of the British Academy, of the Econometric Society, of the European Economic Association, of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,  a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Economic Association, a correspondant of the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques. She was made O.B.E for services to economics. She was on the board of the Review of Economic Studies (2008-2015), an associate editor of the AEJ: Macroeconomics Journal. She is a co-editor of the Annual Review of Economics, a Research Fellow and Vice President of CEPR and an NBER Research Associate. She is a member of the Group of Thirty, of the Bellagio Group on the international economy and a member of the external advisory group to the managing director of the IMF. She is a member of the Haut Conseil de Stabilité Financière (French Macro Prudential Authority). She was a member of the Conseil d’Analyse Economique until 2012 and on the Board of the Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel et de Résolution (2010-2014). She writes a regular column for the French newspaper Les Echos. Hélène Rey received her undergraduate degree from ENSAE, a Master in Engineering Economic Systems from Stanford University and her PhDs from the London School of Economics and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.

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Silvia Miranda-Aggripino



I am a Senior Research Economist in Monetary Analysis at the Bank of England and a Research Affiliate in the Monetary Economics and Fluctuations (MEF) programme of CEPR.

In 2019 I was a Visiting Post-Doctoral Scholar at the Department of Economics of Northwestern University.

Prior to that, I was principal economist and model developer at Now-Casting.com and a post doctoral researcher at London Business School. I have taught at the University of Bristol and hold a Ph.D. in Economics from Bocconi University.

My research interests are Monetary Economics, Empirical Macroeconomics, International Macro-Finance, Macroeconometrics.

Some of the questions that I am working on at the moment include the role of expectations in the propagation and amplification of macroeconomic shocks and the determination of aggregate fluctuations, the workings and drivers of the global financial cycle, the transmission of monetary shocks under imperfect and asymmetric information, and the role of monetary policy in shaping agents' expectations and their attitude towards risk.

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